4.6 Article

Task-Relevant Representations and Cognitive Control Demands Modulate Functional Connectivity from Ventral Occipito-Temporal Cortex During Object Recognition Tasks

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 32, Issue 14, Pages 3068-3080

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhab401

Keywords

cognate; fMRI; language production; semantic; ventral occipito-temporal cortex

Categories

Funding

  1. European Research Council [GAP: 670428-BRAIN2 MIND_ NEUROCOMP]
  2. H2020 European Research Council [ERC Consolidator Grant] [ERC-2018-COG-819093]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [PID2020-113926GB-I00]
  4. Basque Government [PIBA-2021-1-0003, PIBA18-29]
  5. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [RYC-2014-15440, PGC2018-093408-B-I00]
  6. Fundacion Tatiana Perez de Guzman el Bueno
  7. Spanish State Research Agency through BCBL Severo Ochoa excellence accreditation [SEV-2015-0490]
  8. Medical Research intramural funding [MC_UU_00005/18]
  9. Basque Government through the BERC 2018-2021 program

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The left ventral occipito-temporal cortex (vOTC) plays a vital role in extracting and processing visual features. The functional connectivity of the left vOTC varies according to task-relevant representations and control demands imposed by the task, even when similar visual-semantic processing is required.
The left ventral occipito-temporal cortex (vOTC) supports extraction and processing of visual features. However, it has remained unclear whether left vOTC-based functional connectivity (FC) differs according to task-relevant representations (e.g., lexical, visual) and control demands imposed by the task, even when similar visual-semantic processing is required for object identification. Here, neural responses to the same set of pictures of meaningful objects were measured, while the type of task that participants had to perform (picture naming versus size-judgment task), and the level of cognitive control required by the picture naming task (high versus low interference contexts) were manipulated. Explicit retrieval of lexical representations in the picture naming task facilitated activation of lexical/phonological representations, modulating FC between left vOTC and dorsal anterior-cingulate-cortex/pre-supplementary-motor-area. This effect was not observed in the size-judgment task, which did not require explicit word-retrieval of object names. Furthermore, retrieving the very same lexical/phonological representation in the high versus low interference contexts during picture naming increased FC between left vOTC and left caudate. These findings support the proposal that vOTC functional specialization emerges from interactions with task-relevant brain regions.

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